advancing addiction science to address the opioid crisis · better access to prevention, treatment,...
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Advancing Addiction Science to Address the Opioid Crisis
Advancing Addiction Science
Wilson M. Compton, M.D., M.P.E.Deputy Director
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Science = Solutions
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services OPIOID STRATEGY
Better access to prevention, treatment, and recovery services
Better targeting of overdose-reversing drugsBetter timely and specific public health data on
the epidemicBetter pain managementBetter research on addiction and pain
Source: https://www.hhs.gov/opioids/about-the-epidemic/hhs-response/index.html
Universal Drug Abuse Prevention Reduces Rx Drug Misuse
Notes: General=Misuse of narcotics or CNS depressants or stimulants. Source: R Spoth et al. American Journal of Public Health 2013
In this study, for 100 young adults in general population starting Rx abuse, only 35 young adults from an intervention community started.
1.2**0.6***
5.4**4.7**
9.38.7
15.5
13.5
0.0%
2.0%
4.0%
6.0%
8.0%
10.0%
12.0%
14.0%
16.0%
18.0%
Age 21 General Age 21 Narcotics Age 25 General Age 25 Narcotics
Family Program
Control
**p<.01; ***p<.001; RRRs = 65-93%
Overall, three studies now suggest the impact of universal prevention on prescription drug abuse.
Science = Solutions
Naloxone Distribution for opioid overdose victims. The potential for direct intervention to save lives.
Nasal spray and Auto-injector formulations now approved by the FDA
Next steps• Longer acting agents to
address fentanyl risks?• Respiratory stimulation? • Device development?
Science = Solutions: Direct Overdose Intervention
I, Surgeon General of the United States Public Health Service, VADM Jerome Adams, am emphasizing the importance of the overdose-reversing drug naloxone. For patients currently taking high doses of opioids as prescribed for pain, individuals misusing prescription opioids, individuals using illicit opioids such as heroin or fentanyl, health care practitioners, family and friends of people who have an opioid use disorder, and community members who come into contact with people at risk for opioid overdose, knowing how to use naloxone and keeping it within reach can save a life.
BE PREPARED. GET NALOXONE. SAVE A LIFE.
April 5, 2018Surgeon General’s Advisory on Naloxone and Opioid Overdose
Jones C et al., Am J Public Health 2015.
In 48 states and D.C., Opioid Use Disorder Rates Exceed Buprenorphine Treatment Capacity
Medications are Underused
25%
9%17%
9%16% 19%
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
% Treatment Programs Offering FDA-approved
SUD Medications
Knudsen et al., J Addict Med 2011
25%
75%
In 2014, only 25% of opioid admissions had treatment plans that included receiving medications.
Treatment Episode Data Set (TEDS): 2004-2014.
MAT No MAT
• Initiating buprenorphine treatment in the emergency department improves treatment engagement and reduces illicit opioid use
• Extended release naltrexone initiated in criminal justice settings lowers relapse rates and overdoses
• XR-Naltrexone and BUP-Nx Equally Safe and Effective (After Induction)
• Lofexidine for opioid withdrawal treatment recommended by FDA Advisory Committee March 29, 2018
Science = Solutions: Improving Addiction Treatment
Lee JD, et al., Addiction 2015;100:1005-1014 and New Eng J Med 2016;374:1232-1242
Relapse-free survival
Lee JD et al., The Lancet Nov. 14, 2017
Counties Deemed Highly Vulnerable to Rapid Dissemination of HCV or HIV
Source: Van Handel et al, JAIDS 2016
Rising rates of HCV
HIV (and Hepatitis C) Outbreak Linked to Oxymorphone Injection
Use in Indiana, 2015Peters et al.
The New England Journal of Medicine2016;375:229-239
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
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Num
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National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (NNDSS)
• ~31,000 new HCV infections in 2015
• 1:1 male: female ratio, predominantly white
Science = Solutions: NIDA, CDC, SAMHSA, ARC Partnering to Combat HIV and Viral Hepatitis in Rural Areas
New England
Ohio
West Virginia
Kentucky
North Carolina
Illinois
WisconsinOregon
Elimination of Hepatitis C
Work to date includes pilot funding to the University of Kentucky to develop community-based components:
NIDA and NCI are working with CDC to develop a study of the elimination of HCV in a high-risk community in Kentucky.
• Syringe exchange• Drug treatment• Linkages with criminal justice (because of high-risk persons
re-entering the community)• Access to medical care.• Hepatitis C testing and TREATMENT
22 MSAs:
• Improve recruitment of young (<30 years) PWID
• Include HCV testing in NHBS sites
• Expand recruitment outside of urban core
Plans for 2018
NIDA Joining CDC on the 2018 Update to the National HIV Behavioral Surveillance among Persons Who Inject Drugs
New NIH Initiative to Address the Crisis:HEAL: Helping to End Addiction Long-term
• Collaborative, cross-cutting research• From basic to behavioral – and everything between• Innovative partnerships – across agencies, sectors,
organizations – will ensure rapid progress • $500M just added by Congress
• Adds to $600M current funds = $1.1B for FY18• Will propel HEAL
• Advances national priorities for pain, addiction research
NIH HEAL Initiative: Selected 2018 Priorities
Pain ManagementOpioid Use Disorder
• Understand neurobiology of chronic pain
• Develop new non-addictive treatments for pain
• Build Clinical Trial Network for chronic pain
• Improve therapeutic approaches to addiction and overdose
• Carry out real world implementation research to optimize interventions
• Evaluate treatments, consequences of Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome (NOWS)
Science = Solutions : Opioid Use and Misuse During Pregnancy
Increasing NICU Admissions for Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome NAS (per 1000
Admissions)
Source: Tolia VN, Patrick SW, et al., NEJM 2015;372:2118-2126.
Buprenorphine resulted in a shorter durationof NAS treatment and length of hospital stay
than treatment with morphineSource: Kraft WK et al., NEJM 2017;376:2341-2348.
Buprenorphine for NAS Tx
Source: Winkelman TNA, Villapiano N, Kozhimannil KB, Davis MM, Patrick SM.. Pediatrics. 2018;141(4):e20173520
Increasing Costs for Neonatal Exposure
HEAL – Neonatal Opioid WithdrawalAdvancing Clinical Trials in NOWs: Pilot Study
Neonatal Research Network Centers (2016-2021)
IDeA States Pediatric Clinical Trials Network
1 year pilot funding from Director’s Discretionary Fund 2017 20 clinical sites participating Assess prevalence of NOWs at different sites, current approaches to
treatment, and develop common protocols for future studies
• Clinical trials for care of infants with NOWs– Determine effectiveness of currently used medications to treat withdrawal– Compare pharmacologic approaches to drug-free strategies
• Eat, sleep, console
– Assess impact of prenatal exposure to opioids• Effects on developing brain structure and function• Higher risk for school performance problems• Long-term risk for addiction
• Determine best practices to improve short- and long-term outcomes
HEAL – Neonatal Opioid WithdrawalAdvancing Clinical Trials in NOWs: Pilot Study
• NIDA collaboration with academics and community providers – Develop, validate, refine, and translate into practice new treatment options
• Expand the size and scope of the CTN– Expand treatment access, options, and education– Facilitate implementation science
• Contribute to improved quality of and access to treatment for OUD– Introduce sustainable interventions in underserved, highly impacted areas– Implement OUD treatment practices in general medical settings– Expand of the OUD treatment clinical and research workforce
HEAL – Treatment EnhancementsAdvancing NIDA’s Clinical Trials Network
• Increase collaborations between justice systems and community-based treatment providers to improve continuity of care– Enhance access and retention in OUD treatment
• Justice community-related research through network of investigators – National survey of addiction treatments in jails, prisons and communities– Effectiveness and implementation studies of new and existing medications,
interventions, and technologies in justice settings– Leveraging existing data sources– Developing innovative research methods
HEAL – Justice InitiativeJustice Community Opioid Innovation Network (JCOIN)
Marsden J et al., Addiction 2017; 112:1408-1418.
Opioid Medication Therapy (OMT) In Prison
Mortality Post Release
OMT unexposedOMT exposed
Days since prison release
Surv
ival
pro
babi
lity
OMT resulted in a 75% reduction in mortality (85% reduction in overdoses) in the first month post release
Survival Curve During the Year Following Release (Drug-Poisoning Mortality)
Postincarceration Overdose Deaths After Implementing OMT in a Statewide Correctional System (Rhode Island)
Green TC and Clarke J. JAMA Psychiatry 2018;75(4).
179 157
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12.5%decrease
Statewide Overdose Deaths
1/1 to 6/302016
1/1 to 6/302017
OD fatalities in those who had been incarcerated in 2017 decreased by 60% compared to 2016(5.7% vs 14.5%)
An Immediate Challenge• OUD crisis is escalating• Most Americans with an OUD (~80%) don’t get effective
treatmentCan we draw on all we know now… and develop integrated intervention strategies to stem the crisis quickly? • Study ways to integrate evidence-based
interventions comprehensively– In select areas highly affected by the crisis…
HEAL – Integrated TreatmentHEALing Communities Research Study
• Pilot Demonstration Project – a competitive process involving wide-ranging federal, state, local partnerships, integrating ALL of the stakeholders– Health care, criminal justice, substance treatment, government, emergency
departments, first responders• Test and evaluate evidence-based prevention and treatment in select communities
– Prevent OUD and OD – Screen and diagnose– Engage and retain in medication-assisted treatment– Help sustain long-term recovery
• Goal: Decrease OD deaths and OUD
HEAL – Integrated TreatmentHEALing Communities Research Study
HEAL: Pain Research Overview for 2018
Discovery Preclinical Development Clinical Trials
Preclinical Screening Platform
Therapeutics Development
Biomarker Discovery, Development, and Testing
Target Identification and Validation
Data and Asset Sharing Partnership
Clinical Trial Network
Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures
Research on the Neurobiology of Pain
• Males had higher K opioid receptor availability than females presumably from increased dynorphin.
• Could this help explain gender differences in pain catastrophizing??
Vijay et al., Am J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2016 6(4):205-214.
Males
Females
Gender Differences in Kappa Opioid Receptor Availability
New Target for Pain Control• Congenital analgesia: rare condition, individuals cannot feel pain
–Mutation identified in gene that encodes for Nav1.7 – sodium channel that regulates pain-sensing neurons
• Targeting Nav1.7 to produce analgesia–Several companies now have drugs in pipeline to block channel
• Targeting complications–Understanding what happens when Nav1.7 is blocked
Science = Solutions
Soergel DG, et al., Pain 2014. Manglik A, et al., Nature 2016. DeWire SM, et al., JPET 2013. Bohn LM, et al., Science 1999
A Promising New Generation Of Pain Therapeutics
Science = Solutions
Biased Mu-Opioid Receptor Ligands
Additional Research Priorities
• Precision treatments for addiction• Non-pharmacological treatments• Integrated models of pain management• Linkages between pain, addiction, mental health• Education
Resources for Medical Students, Resident Physicians & Faculty
Web training on pain assessment and treatment
Archived NIDA CME Courses:
Safe Prescribing for PainManaging Pain Patients
Who Abuse Rx Drugs
Opioid Education
Upcoming NIDA CME Course:
Adolescent Substance Use (Prescription Opioid Module)
Bringing NIDA research to
clinical practice
Medical schools have developed innovative curriculum resources about how to identify and treat patients with substance use disorders
Follow HEAL on our Website…
www.nih.gov/heal-initiative
• Complex biological, developmental and social aspects of substance use and addiction suggest multipronged responses.
• The severity of the opioid crisis demands urgent action.
Summary:Advancing Addiction Science
www.drugabuse.gov
www.nih.gov/opioid-crisis
Science = Solutions